
A few days of streaming sunlight. I wander around outside, over the crusty remains of snow, the thawing grass. The garden yet lies covered. A junco picks at seed scattered beneath the feeder. This far along in the chemo, staring at the end, I’m hard used up, muscles withered, fat trimmed near to my bones. But here, here, alive.
My life – physically, mentally, economically, spiritually – has been crumpled up by disease. Now, ahead, lies the unfolding, the remapping. A friend visiting with her three-year-old, with daffodils and chocolate, points out what I’ve recently reckoned with: that my fierce independence, my raving insistence to live my life, on my own terms and never shaped to the pattern of any man (as Tillie Olsen wrote), has long been my lifeline, the way through lean times, betrayal, uncertainty. But cancer, that mighty devil, flipped that in my face and revealed it as my hollow weakness, too.
Day by day here, determined to remain free from the hospital, to finish to the final drop this course of so-called treatment, glean back what I can salvage. Four months ago, I didn’t think I would live to see this season’s Chionodoxa blue flowers. This afternoon, my daughter and I remarked that the walnut tree I planted seven years ago as a mere twig has plump buds on its lengthy branches. Buds, blossoms, leaves. Beyond words.
“Why do you want to shut out of your life any uneasiness, any misery, any depression, since after all you don’t know what work these conditions are doing inside you? Why do you want to persecute yourself with the question of where all this is coming from and where it is going? Since you know, after all, that you are in the midst of transitions and you wished for nothing so much as to change. If there is anything unhealthy in your reactions, just bear in mind that sickness is the means by which an organism frees itself from what is alien; so one must simply help it to be sick, to have its whole sickness and to break out with it, since that is the way it gets better.” ~ Rilke
Powerful & profound thoughts, words and beyond words…
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You are always in my prayers. I was meant to read this today. The Rilke quote was meant for me (and many others, I’m sure). Blessings from PA💜
So glad these Rilke words came your way. Thank you.
How lovely it was said your fist novel was Vermont through and through. What a gift.
Gwen.
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Oh, what a beautiful passage; good words for us all. Thank you Brett!
Thank you!
yes a beautiful passage. and thank you gifting it to me as i’m also struggling with the loss of independence due to health issues. I really needed to hear those words as well as being reminded of how you have faced your struggles with such bravery and courage. you have my gratitude along w/ my thanks.
My very best healing wishes headed towards you…
Lots of wisdom in that quote.
That’s Rilke!
Your words inspire me, whether in good health or ill. Many thanks, many blessings
I can’t take credit for the master Rilke, though.
Thank you!!
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Enjoy the spring in all ways. And thank you for the Rilke quote. Most timely.
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It’s exciting to be near the end of treatment. I hope your next round goes well and your markers are good. BTW, with Lymphoma what blood test do they use? or will it be a scan? Good thoughts your way. We are having some beautiful spring days here in N Ca. It’s suppose to be almost 80 today but then we drop back down in temperature with rain.
PET scan. Originally diagnosed via a liver biopsy. Enjoy your weather!
I’m so glad you’re nearing the end of chemo. I can only imagine the brutality in the “cure”. And what a time to soon renew, like Earth herself. I love your pictures as they bring me back to my first home of New England, remembering crocuses and daffodils bursting through spring snow.
It’s a perfect time of year to embrace recovery…
What a journey, Brett. Very glad you were wrong about that 4 month thing.
Damn, so am I.